Quantity of fluid can be more precisely controlled without disassembling the valve by an automatic flow control valve, which can be quietly operated and repaired and maintained in simple and easy manner. In the control valve, a valve body has a fluid channel and a chamber, which are formed in the valve body and communicate with each other. A diaphragm is disposed in the chamber and has a fluid channel switching shaft connected to one surface thereof. A flow control member is assembled with the valve body and extends toward the fluid channel. A fluid transfer hole communicating with an entrance port is formed at an upper portion of a side surface of the chamber, so that an opening degree of the fluid channel can be automatically controlled by the fluid channel switching shaft connected with the diaphragm when the diaphragm is operated by pressure of the fluid transferred through the fluid transfer hole.
Legal claims defining the scope of protection, as filed with the USPTO.
1. An automatic flow control valve comprising: a valve body including an entrance port, an exit port and a fluid channel extending between the entrance port and the exit port in a first direction along which fluid flows through the valve body; a chamber formed in said valve body between the entrance port and the exit port, and extending in a second direction substantially transverse to the first direction, said chamber including an upper chamber portion, a lower chamber portion, and a central chamber portion located between the upper chamber portion and the lower chamber portion in the second direction, wherein the upper chamber portion, the lower chamber portion and the central chamber portion fluidly communicate with one another, and the fluid channel extends through the central chamber portion; a fluid transfer hole formed in an upper portion of said valve body for fluidly connecting the entrance port and the upper chamber portion; a diaphragm mounted in the upper chamber portion, said diaphragm having a top surface and a bottom surface, and extending substantially in the first direction; a fluid channel switching shaft extending in the second direction in the upper and central chamber portions, said fluid channel switching shaft including a top flange portion connected to the bottom surface of said diaphragm, wherein said diaphragm and said fluid channel switching shaft are moved in the second direction by fluid pressure passing through said fluid transfer hole for changing the volume of the central chamber portion; a spring mounted around said fluid channel switching shaft between the top flange portion and a lower end of the upper chamber portion; and a flow control mechanism mounted in the lower chamber portion and including a cover screwed onto said valve body, an adjustment screw passing through a central through hole in the cover and extending in the second direction toward the central chamber portion to control an opening degree of the fluid channel, and a cap covering the adjustment screw.
2. The automatic flow control valve according to claim 1 , wherein the upper chamber portion includes a first compartment positioned above said diaphragm and fluidly connected with said fluid transfer hole, and a second compartment positioned below said diaphragm and fluidly connected with the central chamber portion.
3. The automatic flow control valve according to claim 2 , wherein the second compartment and the central chamber portion are fluidly connected by an inner balance hole formed in said fluid channel switching shaft.
4. The automatic flow control valve according to claim 2 , wherein fluid pressure received from said fluid transfer hole presses on the top surface of said diaphragm, and fluid pressure received from the central chamber portion presses on the bottom surface of said diaphragm.
5. The automatic flow control valve according to claim 2 , wherein said spring is located in the second compartment, and biases said fluid channel switching shaft away from the central chamber portion.
Cooperative Patent Classification codes for this invention. Click any code to explore related patents in that topic.
November 5, 2001
December 16, 2003
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